Zelda Triforce Journal Book Cover: Hyrulean Literature

It’s dangerous to go alone! Take this. When you go adventuring you really should take a journal so you can document all of the treasures you find and take notes on defeating bosses. You can wrap your journal inside of this stylish and classy leather Zelda Triforce journal cover.

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You can use it to cover your journal, a book you are reading, a sketch book, or a day planner. Because these are handmade, no two will be exactly alike. Saddle tan and medium brown dyes are what give it that old and worn out look that is so cool.

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It will fit books up to 5.5″ x 8.5″ or less. The cover itself is 9″ x 6.25″. That is one classy looking journal cover. It will cost you about $84(USD) over on SkinzNHydez Etsy shop.

Hyrulean Leather Journals Are a Thing of Beauty

A plain old journal is not good enough for the video game fanatic. Especially after you have laid eyes on these amazing books. These mythical journals were inspired by the Legend of Zelda games and they get all of the details pitch perfect. Just look at that dyed leather and brass.

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These journals come from MilleCuirs who has an amazing eye for design. The leather is embossed with the Hylian crest, and the Triforce symbol stands out in metal. The interior pages are even dyed by hand so they look aged and the interior covers are made from hand-marbled paper.

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If you’re interested in having one made for yourself, head on over to MilleCuirs’ DeviantArt page for information on custom orders.

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These are so awesome I wouldn’t want to write in mine. I’d just sit there and admire it.

[via Gamefreaks via Nerd Approved]

Loccit Puts All Your Social Networking Activities in Print

I used to keep a diary until I realized that I was just copying down events and things I said about my day from my social media accounts. Not that I share personal details or too much information online. However, I have realized that it’s easier to sum up my day in 140 characters than spend about 30 minutes a day to write it all down.

Loccit

Compiling everything and printing a modern diary sounds like hard work, though, which is why I find the concept of Loccit so appealing. It’s an online service that lets you print and bind your posts and updates from various social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.

Loccit ships to Europe and the US, although the prices aren’t going to be so friendly to your wallet: a hardback diary costs £14.99 (~$25 USD), and each page after the twentieth will cost 20 pence (about 32 cents.)

What do you think of the concept? Would you want all your online memories printed out, or are they best left “in the cloud?”

[via Red Ferret]